Abstract

Until recently, research on the pathogenesis and treatment of osteoporosis and sarcopenia has primarily focused on local and systemic humoral mechanisms, often overlooking neuronal mechanisms. However, there is a growing body of literature on the neuronal regulation of bone and skeletal muscle structure and function, which may provide insights into the pathogenesis of osteosarcopenia. This review aims to integrate these neuronal regulatory mechanisms to form a comprehensive understanding and inspire future research that could uncover novel strategies for preventing and treating osteosarcopenia. Specifically, the review explores the functional adaptation of weight-bearing bone to mechanical loading throughout evolutionary development, from Wolff's law and Frost's mechanostat theory to the mosaic hypothesis, which emphasizes neuronal regulation. The recently introduced bone osteoregulation reflex points to the importance of the osteocytic mechanoreceptive network as a receptor in this neuronal regulation mechanism. Finally, the review focuses on the bone myoregulation reflex, which is known as a mechanism by which bone loading regulates muscle functions neuronally. Considering the ageing-related regressive changes in the nerve fibres that provide both structural and functional regulation in bone and skeletal muscle tissue and the bone and muscle tissues they innervate, it is suggested that neuronal mechanisms might play a central role in explaining osteosarcopenia in older adults.

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